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London Symphony Orchestra & Richard Hickox - Vaughan Williams: A London Symphony (2001) [Hi-Res]

London Symphony Orchestra & Richard Hickox - Vaughan Williams: A London Symphony (2001) [Hi-Res]
  • Title: Vaughan Williams: A London Symphony
  • Year Of Release: 2001
  • Label: Chandos
  • Genre: Classical
  • Quality: 24bit-96kHz FLAC (tracks)
  • Total Time: 01:07:44
  • Total Size: 1.26 GB
  • WebSite:
Tracklist:

1. The Banks of Green Willow: Idyll
2. Symphony no. 2 in G major "A London Symphony": I. Lento - Allegro risoluto
3. Symphony no. 2 in G major "A London Symphony": II. Lento
4. Symphony no. 2 in G major "A London Symphony": III. Scherzo (Nocturne): Allegro vivace - Andantino
5. Symphony no. 2 in G major "A London Symphony": IV. Andante con moto - Maestoso alla marcia (quasi lento)

The Idyll, The Banks of Green Willow, by George Butterworth, was composed in 1913, the same year Vaughan Williams completed his A London Symphony. It is a sensuous work, which incorporates two folk songs Butterworth had collected in 1907.

It was George Butterworth who first suggested to Vaughan Williams that he should write an orchestral symphony and, after Butterworth’s tragic death, Vaughan Williams dedicated A London Symphony to his memory. The work was finished by the end of 1913 and first performed at the queen’s Hall in London on 27 March 1914 conducted by Geoffrey Toye, and, as on this CD, was programmed after The Banks of Green Willow. Following the loss of the full score in Germany in 1914, Vaughan Williams, Butterworth, Toye and E.J. Dent reconstructed it from the orchestral parts, and the first performance of the reconstruction took place on 11 February 1915 under Dan Godfrey. Vaughan Williams revised the symphony three times: in 1918, 1920 and 1933, and the well-known ‘Revised Edition’ was published in the mid-1930s.

Listening to the original conception of A London Symphony is particularly exiting in that there is around twenty minutes of extra music from a time when Vaughan Williams was writing works of freshness and lyricism, including The Lark Ascending (1914).

Many of Vaughan Williams’s friends regretted the cuts, Sir Arnold Bax referred to his sadness at ‘the loss of a mysterious passage of strange and fascinating cacophony with which the first version of the Scherzo closed’. Bernard Hermann felt that the deleted bars in the slow movement removed some of ‘the most original poetic moments in the entire symphony’.

After the first performance of the original version, as heard on this CD, Vaughan Williams’s close friend Gustav Holst wrote to the composer saying ‘You have really done it this time!’ How right he was.


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